brazenfaced
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi á NP í L à Ili à, which means to be cheeky and annoying. From the sword.
The origin of Idioms
Li Kaixian, Ming Dynasty, the fourteenth chapter of the story of the sword: "you are comfortable sitting in this green house. You are so shameful, I am in charge of the prison."
Idiom usage
Daiyu threw her hand and said, "who's talking to you! Every day is as big as every day. I don't even know why. Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in the Qing Dynasty chapter thirty six of Lai zhenxue's historical TV series the legend of the state of Lai. "Guide to Mandarin. Volume I. instructions for handling": he came several times, but I didn't pay much attention to him, and he came all by himself.
brazenfaced
Seeing is better than hearing - ěr wén bù rú miàn jiàn
one 's delight appears on the end of the eyebrow - xǐ yì méi shāo
have a special insight understanding - bié jù huì yǎn
Demolish the east wall and make up the west wall - chāi dōng qiáng bǔ xī qiáng
gang up for selfish one 's own selfish interests - jié dǎng yíng sī